Director: | Emma Holly Jones |
Screenplay: | Suzanne Allain |
Music: | Amelia Warner |
Cinematography: | Tony Miller |
Editing: | Kate Hickey |
Runtime: | 117 minutes |
Gross: | $2 million[1] [2] |
Mr. Malcolm's List is a 2022 historical drama film directed by Emma Holly Jones and written by Suzanne Allain, based on her novel of the same name. It stars Freida Pinto, Sope Dirisu, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Ashley Park, Zawe Ashton, and Theo James.
The film follows a young woman in the 1800s England who helps her friend to get revenge on a suitor who rejected her for failing a requirement on his list of qualifications for a bride.[3]
The film was released in the United States and Canada on July 1, 2022, and later in the United Kingdom and Ireland on August 26.
The beautiful Julia Thistlewaite attends the opera with the most eligible bachelor of the season, Mr. Jeremy Malcolm. After she fails to impress him, she is widely mocked in a caricature. Julia employs her cousin, the feckless Lord Cassidy, to see what she has done to offend Mr. Malcolm. Malcolm reveals to Cassidy that he has a list of requirements for a wife that Julia did not meet. Cassidy lets this slip to Julia who is offended.
Julia decides to invite her friend, Selina Dalton to London to try and exact revenge on Mr. Malcolm, training her reluctant friend to act as the perfect potential bride.
On the night she is to meet Malcolm, Selina accidentally runs into him in the orangery, where the two debate philosophy and are immediately attracted to one another. When they are formally introduced, Malcolm invites Selina to the museum with him where he pleads his case that he and Julia had a very weak connection. While there, the two run into Captain Ossery, with whom Selina was previously acquainted, having served as his aunt's companion in Bath.
The following day, Ossery invites Selina to walk with him and formally announces his intention to court her, as his aunt's final letter to him expresses her desire for the two of them to be matched.
Malcolm does not stop his pursuit of Selina and, aided by Julia's machinations, she continues to present as his perfect woman. When Julia and Selina accidentally run into Selina's vulgar cousin Gertie Covington, Julia claims her as her relation. Malcolm later privately tells Selina he is glad she is not related to someone so crass and Selina is upset by the news. When Malcolm learns the truth, he privately apologizes to Selina and even extends an invitation to Gertie to join him and the rest of the party at his country estate where he intends to propose to Selina.
Julia decides that Malcolm is suitably in love with Selina, and determines it is time for Selina to reject him. However, Selina reveals she no longer wants to go forward with the plan, as she believes Malcolm is honourable and has no intention of hurting Julia.
At a masquerade, where Malcolm plans to propose to Selina, Julia has her maid call away Selina and lock her in a room, before sending a message to Malcolm to meet him in secret while posing as Selina. When Malcolm proposes, Julia rejects him and runs away, only to be immediately found out by Selina, Malcolm, and Ossery. She reveals she is still hurt by Malcolm's rejection and that Selina was a participant in her scheme, causing Malcolm to become upset and reject Selina as well.
The following day a now guilt-ridden Julia tries another scheme to reunite Malcolm and Selina but is dissuaded by Ossery who confesses he has fallen in love with her. Malcolm and Selina later find themselves alone in the garden, and Malcolm accuses Selina of trying to trap him in an engagement; infuriated she wishes him luck with his list.
After Julia apologizes, Selina decides to leave for home. As she does, Malcolm's mother blames her son for Selina's departure revealing that she was the one who plotted to have the two alone in the garden. Malcolm chases after Selina and gives her a new list of everything he is looking for in a wife, the sole line reading "Selina Dalton".
Suzanne Allain self-published her novel Mr. Malcolm's List in 2009 and subsequently adapted it into a script. The script was discovered by filmmaker Emma Holly Jones when The Black List did a podcast script reading of the highly rated script submitted through the website in 2015. Jones pursued the rights and then brought on producer Laura Rister and subsequently Laura Lewis to produce the feature film adaptation. The team decided to make a short film, overture as a teaser to the feature version and partnered with Vice Studios' Refinery29 and their Shatterbox short film series for female filmmakers to make the short. It was shot in October 2018 in London and was released online on February 14, 2019, and, to date, has had over 2 million views. It starred Sope Dirisu, Oliver Jackson-Cohen and Freida Pinto. Based on its success, Suzanne's novel was published in 2020 by Berkley Press and the feature film was financed. The team partnered with producer Katie Holly and her Blinder Films to shoot in Ireland.
Filming began in March 2021 in Ireland, with Zawe Ashton, Theo James and Ashley Park joining the cast. Bleecker Street acquired the US distribution rights to the film, while Universal Pictures acquired the international distribution rights.[4] [5]
The film was released on July 1, 2022, in the United States by Bleecker Street and in Canada by levelFILM, and was later released in the United Kingdom on August 26, 2022, by Vertigo Releasing.[1] [6] Universal Pictures will release the film internationally.
The film was released for VOD platforms on July 21, 2022, by Bleecker Street,[1] followed by a Blu-ray and DVD release on August 23, 2022.[7]
Mr. Malcolm's List grossed $1.9 million in North America and $138,789 in other territories,[2] for a worldwide total of $2 million. In the United States and Canada, the film made $1 million over the four-day Independence Day weekend, finishing seventh.[8] The film dropped out at the box office top nine in its second weekend, grossing $255,116 with $241 average revenue.[9]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 82% of 112 reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.5/10. The critical consensus reads, "Mr. Malcolm's List references countless Regency romps without particularly distinguishing itself from the pack, but it gently entertains as a diversely-cast ode to Jane Austen's works.[10] On Metacritic, the film has an average score of 65 out of 100 based on 31 critic reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[11]